122x Filetype PDF File size 0.64 MB Source: link.springer.com
Chapter33 Hyperbolic plane In this chapter, we give background on the geometry of the hyperbolic plane. 33.1 ⊲ The beginnings of hyperbolic geometry 1 Wehave seen that the group of unit Hamiltonians H acts by rotations of Euclidean spaceandthereforebyisometriesoftheunitsphere,andthatinsphericalgeometrythe discrete subgroups are beautifully realized as classical finite groups: cyclic, dihedral, and the symmetry groups of the Platonic solids. Replacing H with M (R), the group SL (R) of determinant 1 matrices possesses a 2 2 muchricher supply of discrete subgroups. In fact, PSL2(R) can be naturally identified with a circle bundle over the hyperbolic plane, and so the structure of quaternionic unit groups is naturally phrased in the language of hyperbolic geometry. Indeed, it wasworkonautomorphicfunctionsanddifferentialequationsinvariantunderdiscrete subgroups of PSL2(R) that provided additional early original motivation to study hyperbolic space: their study provides an incredibly rich interplay between number theory, algebra, geometry, and topology, with quaternionic applications. This interplay is the subject of the final parts of the text. In this chapter, we provide a rapid introduction to the hyperbolic plane. Hyperbolic geometry has its roots preceding the quaternions, in efforts during the early 1800s to understand Euclid’s axioms for geometry. Since the time of Euclid, there had been attempts to prove the quite puzzling parallel postulate (given a line and a point not on the line, there is a unique line through the point parallel to the given line) from the other four simpler, self-evident axioms for geometry. In hyperbolic geometry, the parallel postulate fails to hold—there are always infinitely many distinct lines through a point that do not intersect a given line—and so it is a non-Euclidean geometry. Theunderpinnings of what became hyperbolic geometry can be found in work by EulerandGaussintheirstudyofcurvedsurfaces(thedifferentialgeometryofsurfaces). It was then Lobachevsky and Bolyai who suggested that curved surfaces of constant negativecurvaturecouldbeusedinnon-Euclideangeometry,andfinallyRiemannwho generalized this to what are now called Riemannian manifolds. Klein coined the term “hyperbolic” for this geometry because its formulae can be obtained from spherical ©TheAuthor(s)2021 605 J. Voight, Quaternion Algebras, Graduate Texts in Mathematics 288, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-56694-4_33 606 CHAPTER33. HYPERBOLICPLANE geometry by replacing trigonometric functions by their hyperbolic counterparts. See [Sco83, §1] for a nice overview of the 2-dimensional geometries. Hyperbolicgeometry,andinparticularthehyperbolicplane,remainsanimportant prototype for understanding negatively-curved spaces in general. Milnor [Milno82] gives a comprehensive early history of hyperbolic geometry; see also the survey by Cannon–Floyd–Kenyon–Parry[CFKP97],whichincludesanexpositionoffivemodels for hyperbolic geometry. (It is also possible to work out hyperbolic geometry in a mannerakintowhatEucliddidforhisgeometrywithoutaparticularmodel,following Lobachevsky [LP2010].) For further references on hyperbolic plane geometry, see Jones–Singerman [JS87, Chapter 5], Anderson [And2005], Ford [For72], Katok [Kat92, Chapter 1], Iversen [Ive92, Chapter III], and Beardon [Bea95, Chapter 7]. There are a wealth of geometric results and formulas from Euclidean geometry that one can try to reformulate in the world of hyperbolic plane geometry, and the interested reader is encouraged to pursue these further. 33.2 Geodesic spaces In geometry, we need notions of length, distance, and the straightness of a path. These notions are defined for a certain kind of metric space, as follows. ∼ Let X be a metric space with distance ρ.Anisometry g : X −→ X is a bijective mapthatpreservesdistance,i.e., ρ(x, y) = ρ(g(x),g(y))forall x, y ∈ X.(Anydistance- preserving map is automatically injective and so becomes an isometry onto its image.) Theset of isometries Isom(X) forms a group under composition. 33.2.1. A path from x to y, denoted υ: x → y, is a continuous map υ:[0,1] → X where υ(0) = x and υ(1) = y. (More generally, we can take the domain to be any compact real interval.) The length ℓ(υ) of a path υ is the supremum of sums of distances between successive points over all finite subdivisions of the path (the path is rectifiable if this supremum is finite). Conversely, if X is a set with a notion of (nonnegative) length of path, then one recovers a candidate (intrinsic)metricas ρ(x, y) = inf ℓ(υ), (33.2.2) υ:x→y a metric when this infimum exists (i.e., there exists a path of finite length x → y)for all x, y ∈ X. If the distance on X is of the form (33.2.2), we call X a length metric space or a path metric space, and by construction ℓ(gυ) = ℓ(υ) for all paths υ and g ∈ Isom(X). Example33.2.3. The space X = Rn with the ordinary Euclidean metric is a path metric space; it is sometimes denoted En as Euclidean space (to emphasize the role of the metric). 33.2.4. If X is a path metric space and υ achieves the infimum in (33.2.2), then we say υ is a geodesic segment in X.Ageodesic is a continuous map (−∞,∞) → X such that the restriction to every compact interval defines a geodesic segment. If X is a path 33.2. GEODESICSPACES 607 metric space such that every two points in X are joined by a geodesic segment, we say X is a geodesic space, and if this geodesic is unique we call X a uniquely geodesic space. 33.2.5. If X is a geodesic space, then an isometry of X maps geodesic segments to geodesic segments, and hence geodesics to geodesics: i.e., if g ∈ Isom(X) and υ: x → y is a geodesic segment, then gυ: gx → gy is a geodesic segment. After all, g maps the set of paths x → y bijectively to the set of paths gx → gy,preserving distance. 33.2.6. In the context of differential geometry (our primary concern), these notions can be made concrete with coordinates. Suppose U ⊆ Rn is an open subset. Then a convenient way to specify the length of a path in U is with a length element in real-valued coordinates. To illustrate, the ordinary metric on Rn is given by the length element ds := dx2 +···+dx2, 1 n so if υ:[0,1] → U is a piecewise continuously differentiable function written as υ(t) = (x (t),...,x (t)), then 1 n ∫ 1 dx 2 dx 2 ℓ(υ) = 1 +···+ n dt (33.2.7) 0 dt dt as usual. More generally, if λ: U → R>0 is a positive continuous function, then the length element λ(x)ds defines a metric (33.2.2)onU, as follows. The associated length (33.2.7) is symmetric, nonnegative, and satisfies the triangle inequality. To show that ρ(x, y) > 0 when x y, by continuity λ is bounded below by some η>0onasuitably smallǫ ball neighborhoodof x notcontaining y,soeverypathυ: x → y hasℓ(υ) ≥ ǫη and ρ(x, y) > 0. In this context, we also have a notion of orientation, and we may restrict to isome- tries that preserve this orientation. We return to this in section 33.8, rephrasing this in terms of Riemannian geometry. Remark33.2.8. Themoregeneralstudyofgeometrybasedonthenotionoflengthina topologicalspace(theverybeginningsofwhicharepresentedhere)istheareaofmetric geometry.Metricgeometryhasseensignificantrecentapplicationsingrouptheoryand dynamical systems, as well as many other areas of mathematics. For further reading, see the texts by Burago–Burago–Ivanov [BBI2001] and Papadopoulous [Pap2014]. In particular, geodesic spaces are quite common in mathematics, including com- plete Riemannian manifolds; Busemann devotes an entire book to the geometry of geodesics[Bus55].Uniquelygeodesicspacesarelesscommon;examplesincludesim- ply connected Riemannian manifolds without conjugate points, CAT(0) spaces, and Busemannconvexspaces. Thefollowing theorem nearly characterizes geodesic spaces. 608 CHAPTER33. HYPERBOLICPLANE Theorem33.2.9 (Hopf–Rinow).LetX be a complete and locally compact length metric space. Then X is a geodesic space and every bounded closed set in X is compact. Proof. See e.g. Bridson–Haefliger [BH99, Proposition 3.7]). 33.3 Upperhalf-plane We now present the first model of two-dimensional hyperbolic space (see Figure 33.3.2). Definition 33.3.1. The upper half-plane is the set H2 := {z = x +iy ∈ C :Im(z) = y > 0}. Figure 33.3.2: Upper half-plane H2 2 Definition 33.3.3. The hyperbolic length element on H is defined by 2 2 ds := dx +dy = |dz| ; (33.3.4) y Imz Asdescribedin33.2.6, the hyperbolic length element induces a metric on H2, and this provides it with the structure of a path metric space. 2 Definition 33.3.5. The set H equipped with the hyperbolic metric is (a model for) the hyperbolic plane. 2 Remark 33.3.6. The space H can be intrinsically characterized as the unique two- dimensional (connected and) simply connected Riemannian manifold with constant sectional curvature −1. 2 The hyperbolic metric and the Euclidean metric on H are equivalent, inducing the same topology (Exercise 33.1). However, lengths and geodesics are different under these two metrics, as we will soon see. 33.3.7. The group GL2(R) acts on C via linear fractional transformations: az+b ab gz = , for g = ∈ SL2(R) and z ∈ C; cz+d cd
no reviews yet
Please Login to review.